Snow
District Info

6 August 2020

This report was produced by the Environmental Enforcement Watch, a project of EDGI. Data utlized to produce this report comes from the EPA’s Enforcement and Compliance History Online ECHO.


DISTRICT INFORMATION

Massachussetts’ 4th Congressional District

Joe Kennedy

Democrat

In office since January 3rd, 2013

Relevant Committee Membership: Energy and Commerce Committee

The House Energy and Commerce Committee is the oldest house committee, and has one of the broadest mandates. Among other things, it has jurisdiction over environmental protection, clean air and climate change, safe drinking water, and toxic chemicals and hazardous waste. Additionally, it has oversight of the Environmental Protection Agency.

Relevant Subcommittees:

  1. Energy
  2. Oversights and Investigations

What powers do representatives on this committee/subcommittee have?

As a member of this committee and subcommittee, Joe can . . .

Cosponsored Bills in Interest Areas

Pull info from govtrack


DISTRICT INFORMATION

Highlights for Your District

464 CAA facilities

447 CWA facilities

464 RCRA facilities

14 GHG facilities

Number of Regulated Facilities that spent at least 25% of the last 3 years in Violation per Program:

Percentages indicate what proportion of all regulated facilites these recurring violators represent


DISTRICT INFORMATION

Your District in Comparison

Still need -

  • Enforcement fines nationally and statewide
  • GHG emissions nationally and statewide (2018)

Program Specific Information

Clean Air Act

The Clean Air Act (CAA) is the comprehensive federal law that regulates air emissions from stationary and mobile sources. Among other things, this law authorizes EPA to establish National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) to protect public health and to regulate emissions of hazardous air pollutants EPA. For the CAA, inspections are the most common way of identifying violations, so less violations aren’t necessarily an improvement. Recent cuts in inspections is likely related to a drop in violations. More info on CAA

Add here:

  • Enforcement # over time since 2001
  • Number and Naming facilities with top compliance problems past 3 years

Program Specific Information

Clean Water Act

The Clean Water Act is a series of regulations that govern discharges of pollutants and regulates water quality standards for waters of the United States. The CWA established the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) which permits discharges of pollutants EPA. Unlike the CAA, CWA violations are reported automatically through the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES), so violations are recorded independently of facility inspections. CWA inspections often occur in response to recorded violations. More info on CWA

Once we have the data, add here:

  • Violations over time since 2001
  • Inspections over time since 2001
  • Enforcement ($ and #) over time since 2001
  • Number and Naming facilities with top compliance problems past 3 years

Program Specific Information

Resource Conservation and Recovery Act

The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) gives EPA the authority to control hazardous waste from the “cradle-to-grave”, regulating the generation, transportation, treatment, storage, and disposal of hazardous waste. Although facilities self-report under RCRA, like the CAA, violations are most often found after an inspection, and a reduction in violations might mean a reduction in inspections. EPA More info on RCRA

Add here:

  • Enforcement # over time since 2001
  • Number and Naming facilities with top compliance problems past 3 years

Program Specific Information

The Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program

The GHGRP is an EPA Program mandated by law that requires reporting of major sources and suppliers of GHG emissions in the United States, including from large direct emissions sources, fuel and industrial gas suppliers, and CO2 injections sites. About 8,000 facilities are required to report their emissions annually, covering 85-90% of total US Annual GHG emissions EPA. By reporting direct sources and suppliers in the same way, the program can misrepresent the geography of emissions, making it appear as if industrial regions have an excess of emissions and suburban areas–where many household-level direct emissions occur–have little to no emissions. More info on GHGRP

Once we have the data, add here:

  • Your district, 2010-2018 < what does this look like visually?
  • Real world comparison
  • Major emitters in your district

About the Report

Data Limitations

Disclaimer

Info about COVID policy.


About the Report

About the Authors

About EEW and this Project

Environmental Enforcement Watch (EEW) is a collaborative project across EDGI working groups. The EEW project builds on EDGI’s 2019 Sheep in the Closet Report that documents large declines in EPA enforcement of environmental laws. This project and others used data from EPA’s ECHO database, revealing how useful ECHO could be for communities to track pollution and EPA responses in their areas. However, they also revealed the inaccessibility of ECHO for non-specialists, along with many omissions, errors, and confusions present in the data itself.

A key goal of EEW is to highlight gaps and inadequacies in the enforcement of environmental laws, demonstrating EPA’s failure to fulfill its congressionally mandated duty. To help bring awareness and action to the state of environmental non-compliance across the US, we are using Jupyter Notebooks that utilize ECHO data to present these congressional report cards for the 75 Senators and House Representatives that sit on the House Energy & Commerce Committee and the Senate Environment & Public Works Committee. By providing a novel and poignant look at the chronic state of non-compliance in their states and districts, we hope to provide these key representatives with the information and pressure they need to hold the EPA accountable.

About EDGI

EDGI is an international network of over 175 members from more than 80 different academic institutions and non-profits, comprised foremost by grassroots volunteer efforts. Since 2016, EDGI has served as a preeminent watchdog group for federal environmental data, generating international effort to duplicate and monitor repositories of public data that are vital to environmental health research and knowledge. EDGI’s work has been widely acknowledged, leading to EDGI testifying before Congress on declines in EPA enforcement, and hundreds of mentions in leading national and international media such as The New York Times,The Washington Post, Vice News, and CNN. For more about our work, read our 2019 Annual Reportand 2020 Annual Report.

Contact Us

Links to data will eventually appear here